Cut stone
Romanesque building from the end of the 12th
century.
It has a 14-metre long unarched nave, a
front choir under a dome, and a choir with a
semicircular apse. The western façade is
remarkable in its simplicity, with its
triangular gable that starts above a
bevelled horizontal panel and its portal
with four full arches descending onto the
abutments at sharp angles.
The square steeple, whose upper part is
pierced by two rectangular bays on each side,
was rebuilt in the 18th century.

A chapel at the south of the choir has
disappeared. In the 14th century, at the
north, a transept chapel was built. Traces
of frescos, stone cut inscriptions from 1194
and 1250.